Latest News:  

English>>Business

Poverty, homelessness rates high in Canada: reports

(Xinhua)

08:29, June 20, 2013

OTTAWA, June 19 (Xinhua) -- Half of status First Nations children on reserves in Canada live in poverty, while at least 30, 000 Canadians are homeless on any given night, according to two reports released Wednesday.

At a rate of 40 percent, indigenous children in Canada are over two-and-a-half times more likely to live in poverty than non- indigenous children whose poverty rate is 15 percent, says the Poverty or Prosperity study by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and Save the Children Canada.

It found that the poverty rate for immigrant children is 33 percent, or 11 percentage points higher than the poverty rate for visible-minority, or non-white, children.

But the situation Canadian Aboriginal children face is most dire, where two out of three status First Nations children in the central-west Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan live in poverty.

To bring all children in Canada up to the poverty line would cost 7.5 billion Canadian dollars annually, of which 1 billion dollars is required for indigenous children and over half of that (580 million dollars) directed to lifting status First Nations children to the poverty line.

Another report by the Canadian Homelessness Research Network and the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness found that at least 200,000 Canadians access emergency homeless or violence against women shelters; are provisionally accommodated in such places as prisons or hospitals; or simply sleep outdoors in any given year.

On any given night in Canada, as many as 50,000 people are estimated to be "hidden" homeless, which includes those who are temporarily staying with friends, relatives or others "because they have nowhere else to live and no immediate prospect of permanent housing," says the State of Homelessness in Canada 2013 report.

Nearly half (47 percent) of Canada's homeless are single adult males between the ages of 25 and 55, according to a Canadian government study, and the report estimates that young people comprise about 20 percent of Canada's homeless population.

The study says that Aboriginal people are "overrepresented" among homeless populations in most Canadian communities, while violence and poverty are the main causes of homelessness for women and families.

In what is billed as the first extensive Canadian report card on homelessness, the study also found that the annual cost of homelessness to the Canadian economy is 7.05 billion dollars. Enditem (1 U.S. dollar = 1.0280 Canadian dollars)

We Recommend:

Fortune Global Forum's guests visits panda

China calls for dialogue after EU solar panel duties

China-South Asia Expo opens in SW China

Huawei launches flagship smartphone Ascend Mate

3D printing gallery opens in Chongqing, SW China

White collars setting up stalls become popular

B787 Dreamliner misses maiden voyage in China

Computex Taipei 2013 exhibition kicks off

12 Asian business women: Intelligent and beautiful

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:WangLili、Gao Yinan)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Officers and men in live-ammunition drill

  2. Special operation members in training

  3. Military airplanes hightlights Air Show

  4. A strong mother's bitterness

  5. Only group permitted to carry guns in China

  6. Thousand audition for 'Rich Blind Date'

  7. Sand sculptures delight visitors at Qinghai Lake

  8. Fan spends 260,000 yuan on jerseys

  9. House price rises cool down in major cities

  10. Highlights of ATC Show 2013

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Political solution the only way out for Syria crisis
  2. GM influx a dilemma for consumers, farmers
  3. China weighs choices on pacific trade pacts
  4. China's effort to restart Mideast peace talks
  5. Cross-Strait hostilities fading away
  6. New points system benefits non-locals' students
  7. China needs to manage forex reserves
  8. China steel price 'to stay low'
  9. FTA will help ease tensions
  10. Wealthy reflect trends in economy

What’s happening in China

Controversial audition for 'rich blind date' -- being pretty is just not enough

  1. Sex tape official stands trial in Chongqing
  2. China braces for natural disaster season
  3. Shanghai releases first food safety blacklist
  4. Fishing boat capsizes off Taiwan, 6 rescued
  5. Hebei to open beach for nude bathing